Greg & Amelia
Suzy & Emotions
Wei Chen & Friendship
Transformation & Identity
Literary Devices
100

Why does Greg tell Jin not to ask Amelia out again?  

He asks Jin not to ask Amelia out again to protect her and to keep Jin away.

100

How does Timmy upset Suzy?

He calls her a racist slur.
100

What word does Wei‑Chen use to describe his relationship with Jin during their confrontation?

“Brothers.”

100

What object or place does Jin go to after dreaming that indicates he’s about to change?

He goes to the bathroom/mirror after dreaming; the mirror is central.

100

What recurring visual motif signals Jin’s fleeting confidence in Chapter 5 and reappears in feelings leading up to Chapter 8?

Lightning bolts in hair (visual motif for confidence/jolt).

200

What line from Greg suggests he feels protective of Amelia but possibly biased about Jin?

“She’s like a sister to me! … She has to start paying attention to who she hangs out with.” (179)

200

Describe Suzy’s posture and facial expression when she tells Jin how she feels.

Slumped shoulders, tears, averting eyes—she looks despondent and vulnerable.

200

What exact phrase does Jin repeat to distance himself from Wei‑Chen?

“You and I are not alike. We’re nothing alike.” (191)

200

What line from the herbalist’s wife is recalled before Jin’s transformation?

“It’s easy to become anything you wish … so long as you’re willing to forfeit your soul.” (herbalist’s wife)

200

Explain the function of the thought‑bubble sequences when Jin replays interactions (why the author uses them).

Thought bubbles let readers see imagined, idealized responses and Jin’s inner conflict—author shows regret and internalized voice.

300

How does this exchange change readers’ view of Greg compared to earlier chapters?

It complicates Greg—he shifts from sympathetic ally to someone who may hold biased assumptions about Jin.

300

What does Suzy mean when she says, “I kind of feel like that all the time”?

She means accumulated shame from repeated slurs and exclusion; micro‑aggressions have made the insult feel internalized.

300

How is Jin’s language toward Wei‑Chen connected to Greg’s earlier language to Jin?

Jin repeats language he heard Greg use to exclude him—he internalizes and redirects it.

300

Describe what Jin sees in the mirror when he transforms. Is it literal or symbolic?

He sees a blonde‑haired white boy; symbolic of wishful self‑perception/assimilation, not literal change; reflects internalized desire to be accepted

300

What is the effect of the laugh track in scenes elsewhere in the novel, and why might a laugh track appear in the panel after Jin’s renaming?

Laugh track signals public ridicule; at Jin’s renaming it undercuts the seeming triumph and makes the moment ironic/discomfiting—readers should feel uneasy.

400

What psychological motive might explain Greg’s behavior (jealousy, social status, or prejudice)?

Possible motives: jealousy (he likes Amelia), concern about social status, or racial bias; evidence: his “sister” line plus telling Jin to stop.

400

Why does Jin attempt to kiss Suzy immediately after she confesses her feelings?

Jin is trying to comfort, impulsively seeking closeness, or reacting awkwardly to emotional intensity; also may be attempt to regain control. Text shows sudden impulse after her confession.

400

Why does Jin direct Greg’s words at Wei‑Chen?  

As a defense mechanism, Jin is projecting and redirecting shame/anger onto Wei‑Chen and unleashing his internalized racism.

400

Why does Jin choose the name “Danny” after his transformation? Relate to identity and assimilation.

“Danny” is a name that sounds white/American; choosing it signals Jin’s desire to adopt a new identity aligned with majority culture.

400

Identify and explain one example of irony in Chapter 8 involving Jin and his friends.

Irony: Jin adopting Greg’s hairstyle and language to fit in—he becomes what excluded him; his attempt to gain acceptance causes him to hurt his friends.

500

Compare Greg’s request to any earlier scene where a character excludes another. How does it reinforce the book’s theme of social exclusion

Mirrors other exclusion scenes (e.g., Timmy mocking Jin). Reinforces theme that exclusion can come from seemingly “nice” peers.

500

How does Suzy’s physical response to Jin (punching him) reveal character traits and assert agency? Connect to theme of self‑defense and dignity.

Suzy’s punch shows she defends boundaries, is not passive—asserts agency, signals strength and refusal to be objectified.

500

How does Wei‑Chen’s physical reaction to Jin’s cruelty (what he does) serve as a narrative turning point? Explain consequences for their friendship.

Wei‑Chen punches Jin (left hook) — this physical backlash ends their friendship temporarily and forces Jin to confront the harm he caused.

500

Compare Jin’s transformation into Danny with the Monkey King becoming the Great Sage. What similar motivations drive both transformations?

Both seek to escape an identity they see as limiting (Monkey King → Great Sage; Jin → Danny). Motivated by shame and desire for acceptance; both transformations fail to solve core issues and reflect self‑alienation.

500

How does Gene Luen Yang use parallel scenes across the three narratives (Monkey King / Jin / Danny) to develop the novel’s central theme about identity?

Yang uses parallel plots and mirrored scenes (e.g., exclusion/laughter at Monkey King and Jin; name‑change moments: Great Sage vs. Danny) to show shared themes of identity, shame, and the limits of transformation.